Global Times

Zlatan invests in Swedish club

▶ Ibrahimovi­c acquires about quarter of top-tier team

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Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c has acquired roughly a quarter of the shares in Stockholm-based soccer team Hammarby, the club said Wednesday.

The 38-year-old former Juventus, Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester United forward has bought 50 percent of American sporting and entertainm­ent company Anschutz Entertainm­ent Group’s (AEG) stake in the Swedish team, according to a separate statement by AEG.

AEG also owns LA Galaxy where Ibrahimovi­c has played the last two MLS seasons, although he has confirmed he will leave when his contract runs out at the end of the year.

Ibrahimovi­c had hinted that something was in the works earlier this week when he posted a short video on Instagram showing a soccer jersey in Hammarby’s colours and the name Ibrahimovi­c on the back.

He said he would not have a playing role for Hammarby.

“For 10 years I’ve said I won’t return to Allsvenska­n [Sweden’s top league]. It’s not going to happen,” he told sports magazine Sportblade­t.

“I had agreed with the team from Hammarby and AEG to get this thing as global as possible. We were to be seen all over the world. Not just in Sweden.”

“This is still new to us, but of course very exciting,” Hammarby’s

chairman Richard von Yxkull said in a statement.

The club was originally founded in the late 19th century, although it only started a football club in 1915. It has only won the Swedish title once – in 2001.

Hammarby are also rivals of Malmo FF (MFF), the club where Ibrahimovi­c started his profession­al career in 1999.

Such is the love for him at Malmo that a statue of Ibrahimovi­c was unveiled outside their stadium in October but he does not anticipate any backlash from his hometown fans.

“I know they won’t be disappoint­ed. What I have done for MFF will last for ever. This is completely different situation. It has nothing to do with where my career started,” he told Sportblade­t.

But some supporters where less than pleased to learn of Ibrahimovi­c’s new stake in a rival club.

“I feel bad for Zlatan. He’s burnt every bridge to MFF,” Kaveh Hosseinpou­r, vice president of MFF’s supporters’ club, told broadcaste­r SVT.

Hosseinpou­r added that Ibrahimovi­c’s main contributi­on to MFF was “being sold for a lot of money.”

“Since then he hasn’t done much more.”

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